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The New Jersey jihadists: another strange alleged terrorist
plot
By Jerry White
10 May 2007
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The US Justice Department has charged six immigrants in New
Jersey with participating in an alleged terrorist plot to attack
a heavily fortified US Army base in the state, according to federal
court papers filed Tuesday. FBI officials say the accusedfour
ethnic Albanians from the former Yugoslavia, one Jordanian and
a young man from Turkey who had all lived in the US for yearswere
planning to kill scores, if not hundreds, of US soldiers at Fort
Dix.
The media and various political figures immediately parroted
the government charges about a Muslim terrorist plot, adding that
the fact the suspects had no known connections to a Middle Eastern
terrorist organizations, such as Al Qaeda, made them even more
dangerous because they were a new breed of homegrown
and loosely organized terrorists who were harder to detect. This
is a stark reminder that we cannot let down our guard, said
US Rep. James Saxton, a New Jersey Republican and senior member
of the House Armed Services Committee. Today is proof positive
that terrorists can be among us, even in suburban locations like
Cherry Hill, N.J., and that Americans must stay vigilant.
The sixMohamad Ibrahim Shnewer, 22; Dritan Anthony
or Tony Duka, 28; Shain Duka, 26; Eljvir Elvis
Duka, 23; Serdar Tatar, 23; and Agron Abdullahu, 24were
ordered held without bail for a hearing Friday in a Camden, New
Jersey federal court. Five were charged with conspiracy to kill
U.S. military personnel; the sixth, Abdullahu, was charged with
aiding and abetting illegal immigrants in obtaining weapons.
Defense attorneys for the accused have yet to present their
side of the story. The only information about the alleged plot
that has been provided has come from the prosecution and the FBI.
From the indictment, however, it is evident that the case follows
a pattern of similar highly publicized terrorist conspiracies
pursued by the Bush administration, in which the chief instigator
of the alleged plot was a paid government informant and agent
provocateur who encouraged the operation, made arrangements to
secure weapons and pressed ahead in the face of the caution and
reluctance of the so-called jihadists.
As in a key previous casethe 1995 conviction of blind
Egyptian cleric Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahmanthe US government
used a former member of the Egyptian military to infiltrate the
New Jersey group and tape record conversations with the alleged
plotters and apparently play the central role in the supposed
plot. While the indictment includes what are alleged to be the
taped remarks of several of the six menin which they declare
their determination to kill US soldiersit does not include
what the informant might have said to provoke these responses.
A hint of the relationship, however, is included in what is
presented as the transcript of recorded remarks, in which one
of the defendants, Mohamad Schnewer, is quoted as telling the
informant, I am at your services as you have more experience
than me in military bases and in life.
All that is known about a supposed conspiracy before the infiltration
of the FBIs man is that several of the six men had engaged
in target practice at a firing range in Pennsylvania, while shouting
Allah Akbar! Although prosecutors claim the plot had
already been hatched, this did not stop one of the accused men,
in January 2006, from throwing all caution to the wind and taking
a videotape of their activities to a store where he asked a clerk
to copy it onto a DVD. The employee, alarmed by a video showing
10 men shooting weapons and shouting Arabic slogans, contacted
the FBI.
Two months after the FBI had been tipped off about the videotape
the informant befriended Mohamad Shnewer, a Philadelphia cab driver,
who prosecutors claim was the ringleader. Shnewer introduced the
informant to three brothersDritan, Eljvir and Shain Dukaundocumented
immigrants from the former Yugoslavia who lived in Cherry Hill
and ran a roofing company out of their garage. The group often
held paintball games in the woods near the Dukass home.
The 16-month investigation, which ultimately involved two informants
and dozens of recorded sessions with the accused, has all the
earmarks of a sting operation, in which the federal government
manufactured a plot in order to entrap the six men. Much has been
made of the map of Fort Dix, which Sedar Tartar retrieved from
his fathers restaurant, which delivered food to the military
camp. Tatar reportedly expressed his concern for his family if
he were caught with the map, but the informant insisted that he
get it.
Suspect went to police to report terrorist
plot
Tatar apparently considered the pressure from the informant
so unusual that he confronted the government agent and demanded
to know if he was a Fed, i.e., a federal law enforcement
agent. In a move that hardly indicates that he was a terrorist
plotting to attack a US government installation Tatar then went
to the Philadelphia police department to complain that he was
being pressured by someone into getting a map of Fort Dix and
that he thought this had something to do with a terrorist plot.
The federal prosecutors acknowledge that this visit to the
police occurred, but portray it as an attempt by Tatar to determine
whether he was under FBI surveillance. Point 31 in the indictment
states, In a possible effort to determine whether CW-1 [paid
informant] was a law enforcement officer, SERDAR TATAR on November
15, 2006 contacted a sergeant with the Philadelphia Police Department
and stated that he had been approached by an individual who had
pressured him to acquire maps of Fort Dix. TATAR also told the
police officer that he did not supply the map and was fearful
that the incident was terrorist-related. The sergeant telephoned
the FBI in TATARs presence.
Nevertheless the informant pressed Tatar to get the map. He
ultimately vowed to obtain the map, stating, Im gonna
do it, whether you are [FBI] or not...It doesnt matter to
me, whether I get locked up, arrested, or get taken away, it doesnt
matter. Or I die, doesnt matter. Im going to do it
in the name of Allah.
Another thing the prosecution has yet to explain is why Tatar
continued with the alleged plot months after the FBI contacted
him in December 2006 and questioned him about being part of a
terrorist operation. On March 9, three months after being interviewed
by the FBI, Tatar was recorded discussing preparing for their
operation in a military fashion. The next day he said he wanted
to join the US Army so he could kill US soldiers from the inside.
After the indictment Tatars father, Muslim Tatar, 54,
said the accusations against his son were hard to accept. He
is not a terrorist. I am not a terrorist, he told the Star-Ledger
of Newark. The elder Tatar told ABC News he had no indication
his son harbored a deep hatred of the United States. I came
here from Turkey in 1992, and this is my country. I love this
country, Muslim Tatar told ABC.
The informant also played the key role in telling the group
that he could obtain fully automatic weapons, including AK-47s
and M16s, as well as RPGs and grenades, telling them he would
get them from a source in Baltimore who would deliver the weapons
to New Jersey. Once again he apparently reassured several of the
accused men not to worry about purchasing illegal weapons.
In one tape-recorded conversation on April 6, Dritan Duka told
the informant, I just want to be safe brother.. I just need
to, cause I trust you brother, you understand? I got five
kids so I dont wanna go down. People catch me like they
think Im a terrorist.
The informant also accompanied Shnewer to several other military
installations, including the Dover Air Force Base, in Delaware,
to discuss potential targets.
According to the indictment several members of the group watched
what the FBI described as mujahedeen training videos
at a nearby rented house. When one video showed a US Marines
arm being blown off, the group burst into laughter, the criminal
complaint states. In April, the informant arranged a gun buy,
and Monday night, FBI agents posing as the sellers showed up at
the Dukas home with an inoperable AK-47. The deal was consummated
and arrests were made.
There is no doubt that the actions of the US military around
the world are provoking a level of disgust and anger that could
well produce misguided terrorist attacks within the US itself.
Nonetheless, the various terrorist plots exposed by
the Bush administration have virtually without exception been
characterized by a similar lack of any real preparation for violence
combined with the central role of a covert informant/agent provocateur.
In each of these cases, the supposed conspiracy has been heavily
publicized in a transparent bid to justify the ongoing military
occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan and to create a climate of
fear in order to suppress democratic rights in the US itself.
The exposure of the latest alleged plot has coincided with
an unprecedented political crisis for the administration. With
the presidents standing in the polls falling to record lows
and US military casualties in Iraq increasing as the quagmire
in the occupied country deepens, the political motive for unveiling
another supposed terrorist threat from within is abundantly clear.
See Also:
Miami terror
arrestsa government provocation
[24 June 2006]
FBIs Albany
terror sting begins to unravel
[19 August 2004]
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